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Clinton airs thousands of positive ads while Trump is silent
Hillary Clinton has a double-digit advantage over Donald Trump when it comes to representing voters’ views on health care, according to a new Kaiser Family Foundation poll. Sixty-seven percent of voters now say Clinton is not honest and trustworthy, up from 62 percent last month and the highest percentage this election cycle.
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Just two days ago, Quinnipiac released new swing-state polling that rattled the political world: Donald Trump, the results said, is narrowly leading Hillary Clinton in Florida and Pennsylvania, and the two are tied in Ohio.
Clinton cooed over Kaine’s characterization of Trump and also suggested a new way to get voters to the polls.
Keep track on how much Clinton and Trump are spending on television advertising, and where they’re spending it, via AP’s interactive ad tracker.
A number of respondents stated that they would consider leaving the USA if their rival candidate was elected as president.
In contrast to Trump, Johnson does better with all millennial voters (15 percent) than likely voters (13 percent).
The ad paints Trump as “unpresidential and unfit for office, in the eyes of both children and, the ad assumes, their voting parents (who, one could argue, might not be too happy with the Clinton campaign’s rebroadcasting of the messages to children watching television)”, the NYT report said. Democrats will nominate Clinton at their July 25-28 convention in Philadelphia.
“She’s a crook, and I’m not going to vote for a crook”, Ms. Bailey said, adding that she would write in Mr. Sanders’ name on the November ballot.
And Lawrence James, 55, of Durham, North Carolina, said: “If Trump wins, well, we’ve already checked out Malta and New Zealand”.
This week also featured a survey sponsored by Fusion which asked those age 35 or younger to describe a Trump presidency in one word, and found far more negative responses than positive ones: 70 percent used a negative word or phrase, with variations on “scary”, “horror” and “terrified” topping the list.
More than half of Trump supporters – 54 percent – said that they had reservations about the real estate mogul, while 42 percent said they would vote for the Republican enthusiastically.
He is the obvious safe choice, according to many Democratic members of Congress. Tthough the Clinton campaign is keeping the vice-presidential selection process tightly under wraps, many Democrats in Washington see Mr Kaine as the front-runner. The overall margin of error is plus-minus 3.1 percentage points.
Clinton vowed to restore the program which would have protected the parents of children who are in the country legally and expand benefits to people who were brought to the U.S.as children.
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Perhaps most disturbingly for Clinton, majorities of voters believe she did something illegal and disagree with the FBI’s decision not to recommend prosecution.